Incredulously, she asked, “Is that why you were at the realtor’s?”
“No, I was there to buy the building where Mason had her studio in Montmartre.”
“You bought the building? But…why?”
“Because it’s hallowed ground. It should be preserved as a museum. A place where people can come and pay homage.”
“You’re joking!”
“Not in the least. This can happen if you and I take the necessary steps and work together now. I’ve been up all night thinking about this. It hit me out of nowhere, like a thunderbolt, and I’ve never been more excited about anything.”
“But…a pavilion…buying the apartment building for a museum…isn’t that a little…extreme?”
“I told you, your sister is special, unique.”
“But there are many unique artists out there.”
“You still don’t understand, Amy. It’s not just her art. It’s her life. Walk with me while I explain.”
He hooked her arm through his and began to walk down the wide boulevard to where it dead-ended at the Hippodrome and Rue Caulaincourt. “Richard, I need to tell you something—”
“Wait. Let me get this out while it’s still fresh in my mind. Mason worked for years without selling a single painting. She suffered crushing poverty, near starvation, and nothing but rejection. And yet she believed in herself and her vision, and nothing stopped her. She didn’t care about commercial success or what the critics said about her. She always found the energy and means to put oil on canvas day after day after day, no matter what, oblivious to the opinion of the world. She was a paragon of honesty, purity, and dedication. She really was a Joan of Art.”
Mason squirmed beside him. It wasn’t true. She’d never been that poor. She’d suffered bouts of laziness. God knew she was full of self-doubt. And she desperately wanted commercial and critical success.
“But the thing that gives a genuine epic quality to her life,” he went on, “is her death. The suicide. It breaks our hearts that anyone so talented, so courageous, could come to that point. Yet, at the same time, it gives her story a mythic power and resonance that will echo down through the ages. It’s almost as if the unconscious part of her genius realized that her mission was complete, her entire life was a work of art, and the suicide was necessary to complete it with a poignant, bittersweet flourish.”
Mason’s heart was sinking. He was saying that the suicide was vital to the legend, and the legend was vital both to the appeal of the paintings and to his fascination with them.
He guided her across Rue Caulaincourt. “What I’m trying to tell you, Amy, is that Mason is something new to art. The artist as outsider, heroic idealist, martyr. I believe this idea has the power to shake the world. If we make it happen—you and I. If we nurture the legend. If we present her work to the proper critics in the proper way. Above all, if we can gather her work and display it before the adjudicaters of public taste who will come to the Exposition from all over the globe this summer, then…it can happen. It will happen!”
Dear God, how can I ever tell him now?
She looked up and saw before her the gates of the Cimetière de Montmartre. What were they doing here? He led her along an uneven cobblestone path lined with gloomy mausoleums and sarcophagi. The monuments were stained black with soot, some of them cracking with age and neglect. As the walkway took them down a flight of stairs, the sun went behind a cloud and a chill wind whipped them. She felt oppressed by the macabre energy of the place and shivered with dread.
On the lower level, he finally stopped before a simple, square headstone, this one new and unstained. Mason stared in shock at its epitaph.
Ici Repose
Mason Caldwell
1864–1889
“It was all her acrobat friend could afford,” Garrett said, “but I rather like it. The simplicity of it seems to fit Mason so much better than all these gaudy monstrosities.”
Mason was staring at the headstone, stricken. She hadn’t expected this. She hadn’t thought about it, but of course they had to bury that poor woman from the bridge somewhere.
It was bloodcurdling, seeing her own name in a cemetery, set in stone. It seemed to give a permanence to what she’d considered only a brief charade.
As they stood there, he offered her his hand. “Will you join me in this quest, Amy? As my partner? Will you help me give Mason the immortality she deserves?”
Mason had left the cemetery in a kind of a trance. She hadn’t taken Richard’s hand and had made no commitment to him. Numb with shock, she’d babbled, “I don’t know…seeing Mason this way…I have to go think.” Then she’d turned and reeled away from him, nearly running up the stairs.
But in this traumatic moment, she’d made no effort to pull off her mask the way she’d steeled herself to do.
How could she? It would ruin everything. He wouldn’t understand. He was so wrapped up in the glory of her tragic young death that he’d be appalled by what she’d done. The truth would rob him of something he considered exquisite and profound. He saw her death as noble, epic, mythic. It almost seemed to be the thing about her that he loved the most.
There was no question in her mind now that, if she told him the truth, he would walk away and never forgive her.
And she would lose everything she’d always wanted in the process.
But what was the alternative? Take his hand? Be his partner? Remain Amy Caldwell?
It was impossible…just impossible.
Hours passed. She walked the streets, wrestling with her dilemma. She knew where she wanted to go, but she was trying to resist its lure. But eventually, it became too much of an effort. She couldn’t stay away.
She crossed the Seine and headed down the Left Bank until she reached the Champ de Mars and the fairgrounds. The work crews had just left the various construction sites for the day. The cordoned-off area, with its signs warning her not to enter, stretched out before her like some sort of half-finished fairyland. And here—among all this rising splendor, in the midst of the glass-domed Palaces of Machines and Fine Arts; the reconstructed Cambodian village and Egyptian Bazaar; the exhibition halls; gardens and restaurants representing countries from all the corners of the earth to accommodate the culinary, scientific, and artistic appetites of the 32 million people expected to attend the fair—Richard Garrett wanted to construct a temple dedicated entirely to the art of Mason Caldwell.
Think what that would do for the family name. All those nasty people who’d looked down their pious noses at the Caldwells. How could she possibly say no? Didn’t she owe it to her mother, if nothing else?
But how could she possibly say yes?
To do that, she’d have to be willing to stay dead, assume the identity of this nonexistent sister, paint in secret, pretending that whatever new work she finished had been a discovery from the past. Not just for two weeks, not just for a month, but for the rest of her life! To never tell the man she loved who she really was. To always have to lie to him, trick him into believing what he needed to believe.
And then there was the matter of the policeman, Duval. Who knew what he suspected? If she stopped now, if Amy disappeared and Mason resurfaced, she could likely get away with what she’d done. But if she continued the deception and got caught, as surely she would…What had Lisette said? The toughest fraud laws in Europe. Ten years for a minor offense. More shame. More humiliation. More scandal for the Caldwells of Massachusetts.
No, no, no.
It